One of the most likely ways to to die on a paraglider is by way of a spiral dive. The spiral dive often follows a collapse, when the sail re-inflates in a "shock opening" with some lines tangled around one tip. The paraglider then enters a violent spin - a "nose-down" spiral dive" - generating centripetal accelerative forces so severe that the human "dope on a rope" blacks out or is even thrown from the paraglider when the lines snap. I have documented HUNDREDS of deaths due to spiral dives.
Many soaring parachutists have been killed after deliberately initiating spiral dives in SAT courses, which supposedly train one to exit a spiral dive, or while practicing spins. The commercial paragliding scammers will tell you that you can learn techniques to make spiral dives no different than other aerobatic maneuvers - but this is a lie. You can lose control. Many, many expert pilots have been and continue to be killed in spiral dives. A few days ago, the five-time Russian paragliding champion Alexey Miheev was killed when he became locked into a nose-down spiral dive while practicing spins at 1000 feet. Here is the video.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... death.html
Note that the impact itself is not shown. The falling human is swung around at such a speed that is common in accidents like this for the internal organs to rupture, the bones to exit through the flesh and the body to actually explode into pieces. I have come across press reports where only sixty percent of the victim's body parts were recovered from impacts on mountainous terrain.
Even if you try really, really hard, you cannot do this on a hang glider. Hang gliders are real aircraft and do not behave in such an insane manner.